Vue normale
What Happens To Markets Once DeepSeek's True Risks Are Priced In | Bradley Tusk
- David Lin Youtube
- Fund Manager Made Billions Shorting 2008 Crisis, Now Prepares For Next Collapse | Steve Diggle
Is This The Last Rate Cut? Economist Steve Hanke On Fed's Next Move
'Highly Uncertain' Economy Ahead: How To Beat Volatility | Lobo Tiggre
America's Biggest Crisis: Is This The Cure? | Doug Drysdale
Nvidia Crashes More Than 16%, Stocks In Turmoil
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Market Recap: Keith McCullough on how DeepSeek is crashing markets
EQUITIES: Chris Vermeulen on why markets are on verge of breakout
ECONOMY: Richard Wolff on how a tariffs could bring about ‘catastrophe’
ECONOMY: Danielle DiMartino Booth on why massive job losses are coming
ECONOMY: Former Fed Chief Tom Hoenig on the ‘inflationary boom’
ECONOMY: Steve Hanke on Trump’s tax cuts, tariffs, and inflation
CRYPTO: Galaxy’s Steve Kurz weighs in on Trump’s crypto policies
TECH: Stargate is the ‘most important U.S. investment,’ says Arthur Herman
MARKET RECAP
Latest News. Markets were down on Monday, January 27th, after news that DeepSeek, a Chinese AI startup, is threatening U.S. artificial intelligence dominance.
Over the trading day, the tech-heavy Nasdaq was down 3 percent and the S&P 500 fell 1.5 percent. Nvidia crashed 16.9 percent, shaving off $589 billion in market capitalization.
Thanks for reading The David Lin Report! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
DeepSeek’s new AI model, R1, is reportedly as efficient as ChatGPT-4, at one-thirtieth the cost. DeepSeek said it used older Nvidia H800 chips for training, spending less than $6 million in the process.
On January 26th, DeepSeek was the most downloaded app on Apple’s App Store.
Keith McCullough, CEO of Hedgeye Risk Management, said that DeepSeek had “the gun pointed right at the head” of Nvidia and other large cap tech stocks.
“[DeepSeek has] a far lower cost [than ChatGPT] and… a more efficient search on a narrower and, one would say, a more kind of expert field,” said McCullough. “Instead of just looking at the entire hospital with ChatGPT, [with DeepSeek] you’d be asking specific specialists.”
McCullough was referring to the DeepSeek’s programming, which allows the AI model to draw from domain-specific insights, as opposed to general-purpose outputs like ChatGPT. This allows for faster processing.
DeepSeek’s breakthrough suggests future opportunities for AI and tech, said McCullough.
“I think, generally speaking, there’s probably a lot of opportunity,” he said. “This is talking about super-expensive GPUs from Nvidia becoming much lesser of a cost, in terms of people having to have those chips.”
However, McCullough said that he would short Nvidia “on any bounce.”
“Before this [correction] happening today, revenues were going to decelerate through the year at Nvidia,” he explained. “It’s an expensive stock with growth slowing, [and] now [there’s] a huge competitive threat staring right at [it].”
Market Movements
From January 20th to January 27th, the following assets experienced dramatic swings in price (Please note that U.S. markets were closed on January 20th for Martin Luther King, Jr. Day). Data are up-to-date as of January 27th at 9pm ET (approximate).
TRUMP coin — down 17.2 percent.
Nvidia — down 15.8 percent.
Oracle — down 8.2 percent.
Moderna — up 16 percent.
Netflix — up 11.8 percent.
The following major assets experienced the following price movements during the same time interval.
DXY — down 1.5 percent.
Bitcoin — down 0.7 percent.
Gold — up 0.5 percent.
10-year Treasury yield — down 1.6 percent.
S&P 500 — down 0.6 percent.
Russell 2000 — down 1.4 percent.
USD/yuan — down 0.9 percent.
EQUITIES:
MARKETS ON VERGE OF BREAKOUT
Chris Vermeulen, January 21, 2025
Chris Vermeulen, Founder and CIO of TheTechnicalTraders.com, said that markets are on the verge of a breakout following Trump’s inauguration.
Vermeulen said that he is currently holding a U.S. dollar index (DXY) ETF, waiting to deploy cash.
“I’m hoping the stock market is going to have one more push higher,” he said. “Potentially in the next week or so, we’ll have another buy signal to re-enter the stock market. The Nasdaq has potential to run about 10 to 11 percent [higher].”
When it comes to bonds, Vermeulen predicted that they would “rise from the ashes” once the markets given the right signals.
“We need a lot of blood on Wall Street for them [The Federal Reserve] to start cutting some rates,” he explained. “Once they start doing that, bonds are going to put in, I think, a miraculous rally.”
Vermeulen also said that he prefers to hold gold as a commodity, as opposed to gold mining companies, citing the latter’s volatility.
“There is going to be a sweet spot to get into miners… [but] we’re not there yet,” he said. “Gold I think will hold its value and go a little higher. Gold stocks, I think they’re a struggle, they’re a higher-risk play.”
STOCK IDEA: DOLLY VARDEN SILVER (TSX.V:DV | OTCQX: DOLLF)
(Sponsored Post)
Dolly Varden Silver (TSX.V:DV | OTCQX: DOLLF) is emerging as a mining stock with strong prospects as silver demand surged in 2024. Located in British Columbia's mining-friendly Golden Triangle, the company offers high-grade silver exposure in a low-risk jurisdiction, making it an attractive play for investors seeking stability and growth potential. Industry heavyweights back Dolly Varden, with Hecla Mining holding a 12% stake and billionaire Eric Sprott owning 10%, both signalling strong confidence in the company’s future. Additionally, major institution Fidelity has invested 7.5%, further validating Dolly Varden’s potential. Positioned as a pure silver play in a safe environment, the company stands to benefit significantly from the rising demand for silver. With top-tier shareholders and a high-quality asset, Dolly Varden Silver offers a unique combination of reward and security, making it an stock worth watching closely.
Watch my last interview with Dolly Varden Silver CEO Shawn Khunkhun in which he discusses the growing deficit that the silver market faces, as well as the future of the silver mining industry:
ECONOMY:
ECONOMY COULD BE ‘DESTABILIZED’
Richard Wolff, January 24, 2025
Richard Wolff, Professor of Economics Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Co-Founder of Democracy at Work, said that President Trump’s proposed tariffs would be inflationary, and that The President’s economic policies would fail to bring down the cost-of-living.
“Tariffs are a tax,” said Wolff. “If we tariff — that is, tax — imports to this country, even on a small scale, in the manner Mr. Trump has been talking about, the result will not be to bring down prices, but to raise them.”
He added that Trump’s tariffs are at odds with the President’s aim to control the southern border.
“If you hit [Mexico] with tariffs, it will shut off a significant portion of their exports… [and, alongside a loss in remittances due to deportations,] that is a recipe to fundamentally destabilize an economy,” Wolff explained. “We’re going to have, on our southern border, an enormously dysfunctional catastrophe.”
Wolff said that Trump’s executive action on improving affordability was “just fluff.” Wolff said that to address the cost of living, price controls should be implemented, like they were by President Richard Nixon in 1971.
“If prices are going up, it’s because employers make the decision to raise them,” he explained. “If you want to control inflation, the first thing to do is to understand, you’ve got to deal with the 3 percent of the people who are employers.”
When it comes to foreign policy, Wolff said that Trump has the leverage to end the Ukraine conflict.
“Russia has made their demands crystal clear,” said Wolff. “The question is only, will Mr. Trump be able to force the Ukrainians to the table to cut a deal.”
ECONOMY:
MASSIVE JOB LOSSES COMING
Danielle DiMartino Booth, January 23, 2025
Danielle DiMartino Booth, CEO of QI Research, said that the U.S. economy could experience 100,000 job cuts in January as the economy continues to weaken.
“We’re on a run rate to probably hit 100k-110k job cut announcements in the month of January,” she said. “I think we’re going to see the unemployment rate continue to rise.”
DiMartino Booth said that the U.S. economic slowdown started in earnest in 2022, based on her reading of the data.
“All of the charts are in agreement,” she explained. “Things bottomed in late 2022, and since then, we now have Americans [experiencing] the median duration of unemployment at 10.4 weeks… You have to go back to 2008 to find that length of time.”
Despite the fact that the National Federation of Independent Businesses’s (NFIB) small business survey showed renewed optimism ahead of the Trump presidency, DiMartino Booth said that this sentiment was disconnected from reality.
“The optimism, the hopium, has to match what we’re actually seeing on the ground with hiring,” she said. “If your average post-war recession was 11 months or so, we need to start talking about when the U.S. economy is going to come out of recession.”
Given the policy uncertainty surrounding the new Trump administration, DiMartino Booth recommended holding gold.
“Gold is going to be the ultimate hedge,” she said. “Nobody knows what Trump is going to do, so your safest place to be in highly uncertain times is gold.”
ECONOMY:
’INFLATIONARY BOOM’ IN 2025
Tom Hoenig, January 20, 2025
Tom Hoenig, former Vice Chairman of the FDIC and former President of the Kansas City Fed, said that inflation is unlikely to come down in 2025, and that an “inflationary boom” is currently underway.
“We’re in somewhat of an inflationary boom right now, not in terms of large inflation, but the fact that it won’t come down” he said. “And that reflects a very strong economy, [as well as] several quarters if not years of stimulative policy, which includes subsidies for infrastructure on the deficit side, green energy, [and] other spending programs that I think help move the economy in terms of demand.”
Hoenig added that the Federal Reserve’s 100 basis points of interest rate cuts were also stimulative, lending support to higher inflation rates.
“If inflation is… let’s just say 3 percent to round off, and the interest rates are 4 [percent], [that] means real rates are 1 percent,” he said. “That’s probably stimulative.”
Because he expected inflation to remain high and the economy to be strong, Hoenig said the Fed should not be “in a rush to cut rates.”
“If they’re fortunate enough to see some… disinflation come forward, that’s great, but I don’t necessarily think they should ease rates,” he said. “Now, if there’s some kind of a shock, or there’s some kind of a significant slowdown, I can understand considering whether they need to do rate cuts, but I don’t anticipate that at the moment. In fact, I anticipate the opposite.”
ECONOMY:
WILL ECONOMIC CRISIS HIT IN 2025?
Steve Hanke, January 19, 2025
Steve Hanke, Professor of Applied Economics at Johns Hopkins University, said that President Donald Trump’s tax cuts should be extended to ensure strong economic growth.
Hanke ascribed the U.S.’s economic “exceptionalism” in part to low taxes, which he argued had boosted productivity, as compared to Europe with its higher taxes.
“A healthy economy rests on reasonable taxes,” said Hanke. “Look at how the European economies have collapsed… The European tax take is over 50 percent in Germany, France, and Italy. It’s almost unbelievable.”
In response to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s claim that the U.S. could experience an economic crisis at year-end if Trump’s tax cuts are not renewed, Hanke said that tax increases would “slow the economy down.”
Hanke added that to address the U.S. government deficit spending cuts should be pursued instead of tax increases.
“If you’re worried about deficits, which Bessent is clearly worried about… you have to cut government spending and retain the current tax structure that we have,” he explained. “I’m for cutting government spending… Actually, I would like to cut taxes and move to a flat tax.”
When it comes to the impact of Trump’s proposed tariffs on inflation, Hanke said that tariffs do not affect inflation, though they will chance relative prices.
“The thing that affects inflation is the change in the money supply,” he said. “The things that we import, that have big tariffs attached to them, those would go up in price relative to other things… But the price level is an aggregate of hundreds of goods and services, and that is affected by the money supply.”
CRYPTO:
TRUMP’S FIRST 100 DAYS — EFFECT ON CRYPTO
Steve Kurz, January 22, 2025
Steve Kurz, Founder Partner and Global Head of Asset Management at Galaxy Digital, said that Trump’s presidency would likely be bullish for crypto.
"I would be surprised if there wasn’t an executive order that at least pays lip service to things like crypto regulations, perhaps to the Bitcoin strategic reserve,” said Kurz, who was speaking on January 16th, four days prior to Trump’s inauguration.
However, Kurz expressed hesitation about the idea of a Bitcoin strategic reserve.
“Why should the U.S. have a strategic Bitcoin reserve, and does the U.S. strategic Bitcoin reserve necessarily make it seem like we’re too weak with the U.S. dollar, or we need something to prop up the dollar?,” he said. “That’s a big question for the government… I’m not sure that it’s a good thing for the U.S. that they do go that far.”
He added that putting cryptos and Bitcoin into a U.S. sovereign wealth fund would “make a lot more sense.”
When it comes to stablecoins, Kurz said that the U.S. government should promote the use of dollar-backed stablecoins as a cross-border payment mechanism.
“It’s literally both a 10X savings in cost to the current system, and it’s a more than 10X savings in speed,” he explained. “The existing system is very, very fragmented and very, very expensive.”
In terms of a Bitcoin price target, Kurz said that Bitcoin could reach $150k within a year.
“It could go higher than that, but it’s going to take hundreds of billions of dollars coming into the space for that to happen,” he said. “I don’t think that’s happening in one year. I think that’s going to happen over many years, and Bitcoin will be much higher than $150k in the medium to long term.”
TECH:
’MOST IMPORTANT U.S. INVESTMENT’
Arthur Herman, January 23, 2025
Trump’s ‘Stargate’ initiative, which involves a $500 billion investment in AI infrastructure, is the “most important American investment” today, according to Arthur Herman, Senior Fellow and Director of The Quantum Alliance at The Hudson Institute.
While expressing optimism about Stargate, Herman said that AI has to go beyond generative AI programs like ChatGPT, and must have direct industrial applications.
“If Stargate is something that engages all aspects of AI as a force multiplier, as a game changer in our economic and national security, I’m all for it,” he said. “But it’s got to be able to do more than just be able to replace human thinking when it comes to daily tasks or writing term papers, or all the things we’ve come to expect with ChatGPT.”
Turning to the topic of quantum computing, Herman said that quantum computers can potentially be more efficient than traditional computers.
“The quantum computer’s key advantage is not that it’s faster than supercomputers, but that it’s able to skip multiple steps in terms of the calculation of numbers and the quantification of data,” he explained. “Instead of reading the entire Library of Congress book-by-book, you’re able to read the entire Library all at once.”
However, Herman said that quantum computing can be risky, especially since it increases the chance that the Bitcoin network and Fedwire can be hacked.
“The hacker is going to appear as a user of Bitcoin, as an investor, and so they’ll have access to everything that operates within the network, within the blockchain, and that means they’ll be able to manipulate and control in ways that none of the other users will be aware of until the value is gone,” he explained. “It’s a stealth and persistent threat, and that’s what makes it so qualitatively different from a conventional hack of the kind that we’ve become used to.”
WHAT TO WATCH
Monday, January 27, 2025
New Home Sales — This shows the number of new homes that were sold over the prior month.
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
FOMC Decision — The Federal Open Market Committee will meet to make a decision about the Federal Funds Rate.
Bank of Canada Rate Decision — The Bank of Canada’s Governing Council will set the Bank’s key interest rate.
Thursday, January 30, 2025
Pending Home Sales — This shows the number of pending home sales that were recorded over the month.
Friday, January 31, 2025
PCE Index — The Personal Consumption Index (PCE) and Core PCE Index are the Federal Reserve’s preferred measures of the price level.
Thanks for reading The David Lin Report! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
'High Probability' Market Is Topping, What's Next? | Adrian Day
Will Trump Send Silver To $100? Change Is Happening Now | Gary Thompson
Why DeepSeek Triggered $1 Trillion Market Crash Today | Keith McCullough
What's Bitcoin's Next High? On-Chain Data Reveals Surge Coming | Markus Thielen
- David Lin Youtube
- Fed To Launch 'Bazooka' After Crash: Why Risk-On Investor Turns Bearish | Matt Piepenburg
Rick Rule Reveals Top Trades To Beat Trade Wars, Inflation In 2025
- David Lin Youtube
- ‘Enormously Dysfunctional Catastrophe’: Economy Could Be 'Destabilized' | Richard Wolff
- David Lin Youtube
- Trump's $500 Billion 'Stargate' Is 'Most Important U.S. Investment' Today | Arthur Herman
Get Ready For '100k Job Cuts in January' | Danielle DiMartino Booth
What Trump’s First 100 Days Will Do To Bitcoin, Cryptos | Galaxy's Steve Kurz
Markets On Verge Of Big Breakout; Chris Vermeulen Reveals Top Trades
Trump Inauguration: Will Markets Boom Or Bust?
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Market Recap: Chris Vermeulen on why a 25 percent market pullback is likely
EQUITIES: Bank of America’s Joe Quinlan on why stocks will thrive in 2025
ECONOMY: Lobo Tiggre on The Fed’s next move and inflation’s return
MARKET RECAP
Latest News. After a significant correction over the past few weeks, markets are starting to recover amidst President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration on January 20th.
On Friday, January 17th, the S&P was up 1 percent, the tech-heavy Nasdaq rose 1.5 percent, and the Russell 2000 increased by 0.4 percent.
Thanks for reading The David Lin Report! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.
Markets corrected two weeks ago, on January 8th, following news that the Federal Reserve intends to limit the pace of rate cuts in 2025. The news broke after the Fed’s December meeting minutes were released.
As a result, Bitcoin crashed from a high of over $100k on Tuesday, January 7th, to almost $93k on Wednesday, January 8th.
Bitcoin has since recovered from this low, and was trading above $100k on Friday, January 17th.
Over the week starting Monday, January 6th, the S&P 500 was down 1 percent, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq was down 1.2 percent. The 10-year Treasury yield was up 3 percent.
On Friday, January 10th, the markets further fell in intraday trading, following news of a positive jobs report, with unemployment falling to 4.1 percent. This was interpreted as news that the Fed won’t cut rates.
Chris Vermeulen, Chief Market Strategist at TheTechnicalTraders.com, said that chart patterns had been predicting a market correction for a while.
“The market has been telling us for a little while that it’s been rolling over, and the Nasdaq is a good leading indicator,” he said. “The internals were telling us, hey, there’s big money flowing out of this market, and the Nasdaq was the first to give this signal.”
Vermeulen predicted that this would be the start of a longer correction, warning that the markets could “really collapse.”
“I think this could be the start of a much bigger correction,” he said. “I think we could see a big pullback of potentially 15 to 25 percent, and then… we might actually see another much larger drop after that.”
If the Fed does not cut rates, then Vermeulen said that investors would prefer to stay in cash, which would further affect markets negatively.
“If rates are going to stay up here, they [investors] are going to be like, you know what, I’ll just stay in cash, I’ll earn… risk-free interest,” he said. “That’s why the stock market is selling off.”
Market Movements
From January 10rd to January 17, the following assets experienced dramatic swings in price. Data are up-to-date as of January 17th at 9pm ET (approximate).
Sugar (commodity) — down 5.3 percent.
GameStop Corp. — down 14.9 percent.
MicroStrategy — up 20.9 percent.
Trump Media & Technology Group — up 13.4 percent.
GEO Group — up 14.3 percent.
The following major assets experienced the following price movements during the same time interval.
DXY — down 0.2 percent.
Bitcoin — up 9.6 percent.
Gold — up 0.4 percent.
10-year Treasury yield — down 2.9 percent.
S&P 500 — up 2.9 percent.
Russell 2000 — up 3.9 percent.
USD/yuan — No significant change.
EQUITIES:
MARKET SHIFT POST-INAUGURATION
Thomas Hayes, January 16, 2025
Thomas Hayes, Managing Member of Great Hill Capital, said that international equities would benefit following President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration.
“When Trump was elected [to his first term, starting in 2017]… everyone thought you had to be all U.S.,” he explained. “[But] international and emerging markets actually outperformed after the dollar rolled over, after the inauguration.”
Hayes said that international markets are cheap relative to those in the U.S., yet would generate similar returns.
“International [markets are] going to have 13-14 percent earnings growth compared to the U.S., [which is] about 14 percent earnings growth,” he explained. “The difference is, [in the] U.S., you’re paying 22 times [earnings], [while] international you’re paying 15 to 15.5 times.”
When it comes to Trump’s policies, Hayes said that the President-elect’s proposed trade policies would not be as disruptive as Trump himself suggests.
“We’ve been of the camp it won’t be as bad as advertised,” he said. “I think the advertisement was 60 percent tariffs across-the-board. I think that’s going to be more modest and more reasonable, like we saw in Trump 1.0.”
Hayes predicted that markets would react to Trump in 2025 in a similar manner as they did to his policies in 2017.
“As you saw in 2016 to 2017, while the dollar rallied after the November election and bond yields really accelerated after the election, after the inauguration, bonds got bid, yields compressed for the next year plus, the dollar rolled over, international stocks took off, biotech stocks took off, oil stocks collapsed,” he said. “It was the exact opposite of what everyone was expecting and we think it could be some version of that.”
EQUITIES:
MARKETS SET UP FOR CRASH IN 2025
Darius Dale, January 15, 2025
Darius Dale, Founder of 42 Macro, said that “conditions are in place for a market crash in 2025.”
He pointed in particular to the roles of refinancing government debt, harsher immigration policies, and a more hawkish Federal Reserve.
“If we get a significant deceleration in liquidity this year, at the same time we have a significant acceleration in global refinancing demand, the markets will crash in 2025,” explained Dale.
52.5 percent of Dale’s asset allocation is in cash, a decision he said is based on his firm’s quantitative model, and not purely on fundamental factors, though he also said that his outlook is “risk-off.”
He added that he is worried about the incoming Trump administration’s economic and border policies, and their impact on economic growth.
“[There will be potentially] dramatic fiscal and regulatory policy changes,” he said. “One of those changes, in my opinion, is the likelihood that we’re probably going to see tariffs and a change in border policy that could potentially create a negative supply shock to the economy… That could potentially cause problems in asset markets, alongside the fact that we are likely to see a hawkish shift in treasury net financing policy in terms of the composition of treasury financing.”
In addition, Dale said that the average investor, who maintains a bullish stance on markets, may be in for a surprise in 2025.
“The average investor out there is already positioned for good news, for the resiliency of the economy to persist,” he said. “Essentially what we’re saying is, based on some of the dynamics that we’re observing in our fundamental research process, specifically as it relates to the backup, the hawkish repricing of the treasury curve, and the strength of the U.S. dollar, these are things that may actually cause that positioning to unwind.”
EQUITIES:
WHAT WILL SHOCK MARKETS IN 2025?
Joe Quinlan, January 4, 2025
In 2025, the S&P 500 will reach a level of 6,666, based on good earnings and a strong economy, according to Joe Quinlan, Bank of America’s Head of Market Strategy.
“[We expect] good earnings overall, better breadth, an economy that continues to expand — say 2.5 percent,” said Quinlan. “We think a lot of these [upcoming] policies… whether it’s lower corporate taxes, deregulation, fires up the animal spirits.”
Quinlan added that the Bank of America does not expect a recession to manifest, and said that even Trump tariffs would not derail the economy.
“Assuming these [tariffs] are targeted, not they’re blanket, and they’re directed more at China than our… trading partners, Mexico or Canada, that you could shave off 0.1-0.2 percent off GDP,” he said. “But there’s enough demand out there, enough capital expenditures out there, to keep the economy moving forward by that 2-2.5 percent over 2025.”
When it comes to Fed policy, the Federal Reserve would closely watch the policies of incoming President Donald Trump, said Quinlan.
“The Fed, in general, is trying to game out what happens to prices if the incoming administration does what they promise to do — raise tariffs, anti-immigration which creates labor problems,” he said.
The Bank of America predicts that the Fed will cut rates twice in 2025, according to Quinlan.
“In general, when you’ve got… high-income consumers out there spending, and you see it in services across the board, then it’s hard to really pencil in this recession, and therefore [have] the Fed continue to cut as aggressively as the Street thought they were going to,” he explained.
ECONOMY:
THE FED’S NEXT MOVE
Lobo Tiggre, January 6, 2025
Lobo Tiggre, Editor of The Independent Speculator, said that the Federal Reserve cut rates in December because of a weak U.S. economy.
“[The Fed] cut anyway, even though they knew that inflation has been going up, and not just [for] one month — two months now,” he explained. “In my view, despite the hawkish cut… the Fed knows that the U.S. economy is weaker than it seems… I think this is why they’re cutting in the face of higher inflation.”
He added that inflation is “coming back,” due to high fiscal spending.
“There is so much money flooding out of Washington… and it takes time for that money to percolate through the economy,” said Tiggre. “They [the government] are running wartime levels of deficit spending and Trump is not proposing to cut that.”
Tiggre said that “sticky inflation is a global phenomenon,” because most countries had increased spending in response to the pandemic.
He also expressed skepticism about Trump’s Treasury Secretary nominee, Scott Bessent, when it comes to his ability to reduce the deficit.
“The markets are pricing in success, not only before it’s happened, but success that has never happened,” said Tiggre, referring to Trump’s plans to reduce the deficit. “By the way, if they do actually manage to cut something, if we do actually increase government efficiency, that in and of itself causes near-term pain… I’ve watched politicians promise this sort of thing before and they’ve never delivered.”
TECH:
TECH BUBBLE 2.0?
Stephen Yiu, January 7, 2025
Stephen Yiu, CIO of The Blue Whale Growth Fund, said that the technology market is unlikely to be in bubble territory, because tech valuations are underpinned by good earnings and efficient technology.
“Technology companies today, while [they’re] a bit more expensive today compared to the last ten years… they are highly profitable,” he explained. “Hence the valuation is less expensive compared to during the tech bubble [of the 1990s].”
He added that technology now is also a lot more efficient than during the 90s, which allows tech companies to have better products and a wider consumer base.
“Today… you can watch YouTube, you can play games, you can socialize with your friends, you can use Teams or Zoom, and there’s a lot more things that you’ll be spending money and time with,” he said. “I would say that building up the AI capability today is a lot easier than building internet infrastructure 20, 30 years ago.”
Yiu’s firm, Blue Whale Growth, aggressively sold shares in Microsoft in 2024, because of the lower return on Microsoft’s investments in artificial intelligence — in particular, Microsoft’s CoPilot AI suite, which requires Microsoft to spend on Nvidia’s infrastructure.
“We are actually seeing, or expecting, the return on invested capital of this company to be coming down from here,” he said. “Hence, we are significantly underweight Magnificent 7, with the exception of Nvidia.”
Because it is required for so many AI applications, Yiu said that he is bullish on Nvidia, but that its future returns would be more muted.
“From our perspective, we still think Nvidia can outperform,” he said. “So if you say to me, oh the S&P is going to do another 10 percent [per] year in the next couple of years, we probably would think Nvidia can do like 15 percent — but it’s not going to make you rich, it’s not going to do what the share has done before.”
POLITICS:
WHY TRUDEAU RESIGNED
January 8, 2025
On Monday, January 6th, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada announced his intention to resign after his party finds a new leader.
Trudeau also suspended Canadian Parliament until March 24th, which means that Canadians will not get an election before May.
Following Donald Trump’s election as U.S. President, Trudeau has been described by media as “weak,” with Trump threatening to levy 25 percent tariffs on Canada. Trump has even joked that Canada should become the 51st U.S. state.
The poor state of Canada’s economy has weakened Canadians’ support for the Liberal Party, and boosted support for the opposition Conservatives, led by Pierre Poilievre.
In particular, 1-in-4 Canadians live in poverty according to a recent study, and many Canadians struggle with housing affordability — especially in cities like Vancouver and Toronto.
This is exacerbated by wage stagnation, which is driven by weak productivity and lower foreign direct investment.
Based on Polymarket betting odds, the next Prime Minister of Canada is most likely to be Pierre Poilievre.
WHAT TO WATCH
Monday, January 20, 2025
Presidential Inauguration — Donald Trump will be inaugurated as 27th President of the United States.
World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meetings — The WEF’s annual meetings will start on January 20th, and continue until January 24th.
Friday, January 24, 2025
Existing home sales — The number of existing homes that were sold over the prior month.
Bank of Japan rate decision — The Bank of Japan will make a decision on its key policy interest rate.
Thanks for reading The David Lin Report! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work.